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Fisheries and climate

Fisheries and climate. Fishery collapse The same story everywhere And climate change too. Environmental issues. Almost all environmental issues are Tragedy of the Commons situations. Let’s look at: Fisheries (or other open-access resources) Climate change (or other types of pollution)

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Fisheries and climate

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  1. Fisheries and climate Fishery collapseThe same story everywhereAnd climate change too

  2. Environmental issues • Almost all environmental issues are Tragedy of the Commons situations. Let’s look at: • Fisheries (or other open-access resources) • Climate change (or other types of pollution) • PS. You can think of pollution problems as open-access situations if you think about air or water as a place for putting waste; so it shouldn’t be surprising that economists think about fisheries and pollution in similar ways.

  3. The tragedy of the fishery • It’s better for the group as a whole if everyone limits how much they fish so that there will be enough fish next year. • Each person individually prefers to maximize their individual profits by fishing like crazy. • Negative externality: When I catch fish, I create external costs by reducing your ability to catch fish next year.

  4. www.fishermensvoice.com/archives/...html Overfishing: Cod

  5. www.greenpeace.org/raw/image_full/internation... Solution: Limit fishing • Restrict types of boats, types of gear, etc. • Set an annual TAC (Total Allowable Catch) limit. • Advantage #1: These can help limit overfishing • Disadvantage #1: Pareto inefficient. • Disadvantage #2: There’s still a race for fish that can be dangerous and inefficient.

  6. upload.wikimedia.org/.../220px-Redkingcrab.jpg www-rohan.sdsu.edu/.../Ocn_books.htm The race for fish • Fish today—while you still can—before the TAC (Total Allowable Catch) limit is reached for the year! • Example: the 2005-2006 Alaska king crab season lasted just 4 days (250 boats caught 14m pounds) • Dangerous for workers, consumers get frozen fish

  7. Solution: “Privatize the commons” • Combine a TAC (total allowable catch) limit with private property rights over that catch. • Individual Tradeable Quotas (ITQs) make it possible to “own” part of this year’s catch. • Advantage #1: The TAC limit overfishing. • Advantage #2: No race for fish (b/c of ITQs). • Complication: Who gets the permits?!? • Note: This is just like carbon cap-and-trade!!!

  8. Policy analysis: Fisheries • Why not just let the invisible hand take care of things? Why do we need to regulate? • If we’re going to regulate, why not just use gear restrictions or other command-and-control options? What’s the advantage of economic instruments like ITQs? • If we’re going to use ITQs, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits?

  9. Policy analysis: Fisheries • Why not just let the invisible hand take care of things? Why do we need to regulate? • There’s a market failure, i.e., individual optimization does not lead to a Pareto efficient outcome. (In particular, free markets are likely to lead to dramatic overfishing.) So it’s possible for government regulation to lead to Pareto improvements over the free-market outcome.

  10. Policy analysis: Fisheries • If we’re going to regulate, why not just use gear restrictions or other command-and-control options? What’s the advantage of economic instruments like ITQs? • Command-and-control often leads to Pareto inefficient outcomes because there’s no flexibility. (What if I want to do things a different way?) Also, economic instruments allow firms to trade.

  11. Policy analysis: Fisheries • If we’re going to regulate, why not just use gear restrictions or other command-and-control options? What’s the advantage of economic instruments like ITQs? • PS. Other policies (like Marine Protected Areas) can also work, so it’s important not to have too much economic imperialism. • The point is to make sure to ask (with any policy) if there are ways to be flexible.

  12. Policy analysis: Fisheries • If we’re going to use ITQs, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits? • To a first approximation, economics has nothing to say about the distribution of permits. Any distribution will (with the Coase Theorem) produce a Pareto efficient outcome. • Economics is basically no help in comparing different Pareto efficient outcomes.

  13. Policy analysis: Fisheries • If we’re going to use ITQs, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits? • To a second approximation, economics says you should auction off the permits because they are an economically attractive source of government revenue. • This matters less for fisheries (not much $), but it matters lots for climate ($$$).

  14. Policy analysis: Climate change • Why not just let the invisible hand take care of things? Why do we need to regulate? • If we’re going to regulate, why not just use CAFE standards or other command-and-control options? What’s the advantage of economic instruments like cap-and-trade? • If we’re going to use C&T, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits?

  15. Policy analysis: Climate change • Why not just let the invisible hand take care of things? Why do we need to regulate? • There’s a market failure, i.e., individual optimization does not lead to a Pareto efficient outcome. (In particular, free markets are likely to lead to dramatic overpollution.) So it’s possible for government regulation to lead to Pareto improvements over the free-market outcome.

  16. Climate change “It may seem impossible to imagine that a technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we are now in the process of doing.” -- Elizabeth Kolbert (author of 2008 UW Common Book Field Notes from a Catastrophe)

  17. Policy analysis: Climate change • If we’re going to regulate, why not just use CAFE standards or other command-and-control options? What’s the advantage of economic instruments like cap-and-trade? • Command-and-control often leads to Pareto inefficient outcomes because there’s no flexibility. (What if I want to do things a different way?) Also, C&T allow firms to trade to achieve least-cost pollution control!

  18. Policy analysis: Climate change • If we’re going to use C&T, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits? • To a first approximation, economics has nothing to say about the distribution of permits. Any distribution will (with the Coase Theorem) produce a Pareto efficient outcome. • Economics is basically no help in comparing different Pareto efficient outcomes.

  19. Policy analysis: Climate change • If we’re going to use C&T, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits? • To a second approximation, economics says you should auction off the permits because they are an economically attractive source of government revenue. • A tax shift that uses revenue from C&T to eliminate other taxes is beautiful.

  20. Policy analysis: Climate change • If we’re going to use C&T, what (to a first approximation) does economics have to say about the distribution of permits? • To a second approximation, economics says you should auction off the permits because they are an economically attractive source of government revenue. • OK, so what about Cantwell’s cap-n-dividend?

  21. Policy analysis: Climate change • What about “complementary policies” to C&T like Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) or CAFE (fuel-economy) standards or energy-efficiency requirements? • Under a hard cap these have zero environmental benefits. Why? • They may have economic benefits... • …but only if individuals are not optimizing.

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